Hello Giggles

Hello Giggles

Hello Giggles

5 October, 2016

THE 4 BODY PARTS WHERE TATTOOS CHANGE THE LEAST WITH AGE

Published by Hello Giggles by xoJane

When I wrote about getting my first tattoo, fellow writer Colleen mentioned in the comments that she’d like her first tattoo to be the phrase “mean reds” (a Breakfast at Tiffany’s reference) on her upper arm. Another commenter responded to her, “Keep in mind that part tends to stretch out as you age,” to which Colleen responded, “Uh… so what? I hope I get to an age where everything stretches and sags.”

The commenter’s advice, although unsolicited, wasn’t inaccurate. It’s true that Colleen couldn’t give a flying squirrel about the possibility of a wilting tattoo, but lots of people (myself included) would prefer to keep their ink looking as close to its original form for as long as possible.

One of the best shots you can give a tattoo at staying the same is by getting it done on one of the body parts that changes the least with age, so I talked to a couple of board-certified dermatologists about exactly that.

One sweet spot on the body is the lower-most back in the very center.

Some of that sagging comes naturally with the way the body changes as it ages, and sometimes it comes from weight fluctuation—stretching with weight gain and contracting with weight loss.

In fact, “Losing weight causes more skin change [than gaining weight] because of sagging skin and volume loss,” Dr. Lin says.

I asked Dr. Craig Kraffert, president of Amarté Skin Care, for his expert opinion on exactly which body parts are ideal for those who want an age-resistant tattoo. Here are the four areas he said are least likely to show significant changes.

1. Your Inner Forearms

The inner forearm, also known as “the next place Marci wants a tattoo,” is more or less the only area on the arm that can effectively avoid signs of aging.

2. The Upper, Outer Areas Of Your Chest

Although your décolletage is a target for sun damage—perhaps you get freckles there or have started to see little wrinkles branching out from your cleavage—not all of your chest is an ever-changing canvas.

The uppermost, outer parts of the chest are usually covered by clothing and don’t really see the effects of weight fluctuation. If you can tolerate the pain of getting a tattoo near your collarbone, enjoy how little it’ll change over time.

Sold out

3. The back of your neck

If there’s any part of my body giving away the fact that I’m not in my 20s anymore, it’s my neck. Sometimes I feel like it’s on a completely different aging schedule than my face.

Emphasis on most. The aging exception? “The occipital scalp at the top of neck.”

A tattoo right below your back hairline will stay pretty youthful, especially if you usually wear your hair down over it. A really bulbous occipital bone might even provide some shade. (Dr. Kraffert didn’t tell me that, but I like to think it’s true.)

4. The center of your lower back

I hate the term “tramp stamp.” Are we really supposed to assume that every woman with a tattoo on her lower back is promiscuous and/or a wandering vagrant? The only thing we should assume is that she wanted a tattoo—one that would look great with age.

“The body is very subject to stretching and contracting from pregnancy and weight gain or loss,” Dr. Kraffert says. “One sweet spot on the body is the lower-most back in the very center.”

Looks like you won’t need Turlington’s Lower Back Tattoo Remover after all!